Sometimes help for scientific discoveries comes from the most unassuming places. Especially for rare diseases, the power of community can be the key to making a difference.
The challenge and the unexpected solution
For , the problem leading Hudson Institute’s research into rare was getting access to large quantities of real-world data, and the solution came from a surprising place: social media.
GCT Survivor Sisters: a global community
While A/Prof Chu continued his search for clues to detecting and treating one of the rare ovarian cancers, Granulosa Cell Tumours (GCT), on the other side of the world a disparate group of women were dealing with the reality of being diagnosed with a disease their doctors knew little about.
Their initiative, in the face of an information vacuum, led to the formation of the Facebook group, GCT Survivor Sisters, with a global membership.
Survivor data informs research
For the Survivor Sisters, A/Prof Chu and his team represented hope and a chance to use their own experiences to increase knowledge of GCT within the patient, medical and research communities.
For the Hudson Institute team, the Survivor Sisters provided a unique information resource: a previously invisible pool of realworld data and, crucially, tumour samples on which to draw in their research.
When the Survivor Sisters went searching for information, the internet led them to Hudson Institute and a collaboration was born.
“Effectively, what this group has done is build a medical database with some amazing information. What’s even more special is that they chose to share their database, so we can understand the disease better through survivors’ experiences, learning what is important for them as well as provide precious patient tumour samples to help design better treatments,” A/Prof Chu said.